请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 officer
释义

Definition of officer in English:

officer

noun ˈɒfɪsə
  • 1A person holding a position of authority, especially one with a commission, in the armed services, the mercantile marine, or on a passenger ship.

    军官;(商船)船长;高级船员;(客轮)船长;高级船员

    he is also a serving officer in the army
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She had lunch with some of the ship's officers before going on to meet members of her air squadrons.
    • He was commissioned as an armor officer in 1991 from Niagara University.
    • Commissioned as an infantry officer, he served in a variety of command and staff positions prior to joining the senior faculty at West Point.
    • His public service began as an Infantry officer in the Army.
    • Anderson later served as a warrant officer and commissioned officer in the Army Reserve.
    • The officers of the Continental Army made up perhaps the most cohesive and most national of institutions.
    • The General was commissioned as an Infantry officer from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
    • In some cases, high-ranking officers re-entered the Red Army with their previous ranks restored.
    • China has sacked two high-ranking naval officers involved in a fatal submarine accident.
    • But the retired army warrant officer said it's not good enough.
    • His father was a retired military intelligence officer in the Egyptian army.
    • There are also schools to train officers for the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard.
    • The new pattern was that he appointed almost all retired army officers into civilian offices.
    • I would not be in favor of seeing another commanding officer in charge of the military.
    • Elected by a meeting of the ship's officers, it helps to foster comradely relations among servicemen.
    • In 1969, he applied for Officer Candidate School and earned a commission as an Infantry officer.
    • We have more women commissioned officers than the Active Army, even though we're about 60 percent smaller.
    • He was one of the earliest Royal Marines officers to qualify as a fixed-wing pilot.
    • "It became an intelligence war," said a senior military intelligence officer last week.
    • The hardest workers among you may become chief petty officers, warrant officers and commissioned officers.
    Synonyms
    committee member, official, office-holder, office-bearer, board member, public servant, administrator, commissioner, executive, functionary, bureaucrat, dignitary
    derogatory apparatchik
    1. 1.1 A policeman or policewoman.
      警官
      Special Constables provide valuable support to full-time officers
      tougher sentences for attacks on police officers
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Lancashire will soon be paying more retired officers than police constables it currently employs.
      • As a poster campaign aimed at urging the public to be more vigilant was launched, transport police said plain-clothes officers would patrol the Tube network.
      • Seiler's case sparked a manhunt involving 150 officers, police dogs and a helicopter.
      • A procedure which left it to individual officers in police stations to perform some sort of balancing exercise would, it was said, be unworkable.
      • At the police station, while officers were speaking to the individuals who had reported the threat, the man showed up.
      • The car stopped in front of the police station and the officer pulled him out of the car harshly.
      • The man was unable to give any information about himself, and officers contacted other police stations in the city to locate his relatives.
      • The 33-year-old was interviewed by Garda officers at the police station at Dublin Airport.
      • At a police station two plain-clothes officers introduced themselves as members of Special Branch.
      • They were questioned by officers at a local police station before being released on bail until October 10.
      • There are now many facets to police work and numerous officers not on patrol.
      • Discipline in all walks of life, punctuality, politeness and good manners are expected from the police constables and officers.
      • Course instructors are officers from Pattaya police station.
      • Unlike special constables, the officers will be full-time and have limited powers.
      • He followed the officer inside the cold police station.
      • There are a number of police stations where officers were selling confidential information to private investigators.
      • They pulled into the police station and the officer guided him in.
      • He was due to be interviewed by officers at Manchester Airport police station today.
      • He then went to the police station whose officers promised to release him after interrogation.
      • In addition to mounted police, motorcyclists and special constables, undercover officers will mingle with crowds.
      Synonyms
      police officer, policeman, policewoman, PC, WPC, officer of the law, detective, DC
      British constable
      North American roundsman, trooper, peace officer, lawman
      French gendarme, flic
      informal cop, pig, woodentop
      British informal copper, busy, bizzy, plod, rozzer, bobby
      North American informal narc, gumshoe, bear, uniform
      Australian/New Zealand informal demon, walloper, John Hop
      informal, dated tec, dick, flatfoot, flattie
      archaic peeler, bluebottle, finger, bogey, runner
    2. 1.2 A bailiff.
      法警
      Example sentencesExamples
      • When the court appoints a receiver or manager the receiver/manager is an officer of the court not the agent of either party in the proceedings.
      • Special bailiffs are officers appointed by the sheriff at the request of a plaintiff for the purpose of executing a particular process.
      • Every official examiner and deputy official examiner is an officer of every court in Ontario.
      • They are interrupted by a knock on the door and Val is horrified to find a bailiff officer on her doorstep.
      • Strictly, this is not evidence, although it is accepted, being the representations of a responsible officer of the court.
      • She owed a vast sum of money, and the sheriff's officers arrived to confiscate the family property.
  • 2A holder of a public, civil, or ecclesiastical office.

    政府官员;担任公职者;基督教教会执事

    a probation officer

    缓刑犯监护官。

    the Chief Medical Officer

    首席卫生官。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I like to drive, he told his probation officer after his arrest.
    • It appears that his offences were committed after he had been recruited by intelligence officers of the government.
    • He said she told a probation officer: "I will never forgive myself."
    • They had forgotten that they no longer were royal officers, but civil servants.
    • He left school at 16 to obtain a secure job as a tax officer in the civil service.
    • Now we know our rights, and protect ourselves from scam attorneys and deceitful immigration officers.
    • Local electoral officers are responsible for the conduct of local authority elections.
    • The professional is held in high regard like the officers of a religious organization or a professor in the educational world.
    • Citizen public security officers marked by red armbands took their places.
    • He did not see his passport, and the agent dealt with the immigration officer at the airport.
    • What is hair raising though is that a civil servant, an officer from the Road Traffic Commission, is involved.
    • It is also an offence to make false representation to an immigration officer.
    • The ambassador and other embassy officers periodically urged the Government to expedite registration of church groups.
    • The samithi has pointed out the need to appoint a jurist or a civil service officer as chairman of the Board.
    • Our system ordinarily reserves that function to the judicial officer hearing the merits of the matter.
    • Other statements indicate a wider discontent among government officers.
    • Government officers should see public property as their own and seek to protect it.
    • During months of bombing, there were no public health officers to issue death certificates, which explains the lack of official statistics.
    • Where a court or a public officer wrongly refuses jurisdiction the exercise of the jurisdiction can be commanded by a writ of mandamus.
    • Environmental health officers serve closure orders when they believe there is a serious and immediate danger to public health.
    • I have never heard of a judicial officer saying to a select committee that they want more jobs, better conditions, better pay, and all those things that flow from it.
    • His wife, Janice, was only asked to confirm his identity to a coroners officer on Saturday July 19.
    Synonyms
    representative, agent, deputy, messenger, envoy
    1. 2.1 A holder of a senior post in a society, company, or other organization.
      a chief executive officer

      首席执行官。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Others argue that they can always unload a stock if corporate officers and directors are taking advantage of shareholders.
      • I carried over my enthusiasm for D-dimer testing to another hospital in which I was a medical senior house officer.
      • He is Lucent's chief technology officer and executive vice president of corporate strategy and marketing.
      • In the past decade, many of my co-workers have left journalism to become mostly corporate public relation officers.
      • Like Amegy, Sterling's officers and directors control about 9 percent of the bank's shares.
      • A creditor cannot come after an officer, director or shareholder to satisfy the obligations of the corporation.
      • They have held corporate officers and directors accountable for their actions.
      • There are several local union officials and officers involved.
      • She said the Minister appointed the chief executive officer of the authority last week.
      • Its August survey of banks' senior loan officers says business loans are increasingly available.
      • For example left wing union officers organised the teachers' demonstration in London in March.
      • Francis becomes chief marketing officer and managing director at the Wayne, Pa., company.
      • The university relations officer works to represent students on all matters pertaining to governance of the university.
      • The chief technical officer and senior vice president also believes size is only part of the story.
      • National union officers reported privatization increased the likelihood of redundancies and lower job security.
      • Directors, officers and other senior financial officers set the tone for ethical behavior within any organization.
      • The Applicant was represented by an officer of his trade union.
      • He rocketed to the post of chief financial officer in less than eight years.
      • The investment management company separated the roles of chief investment officer and managing director following the controversy.
      • The regional directorate has its own press officers, accountants and managers.
      • He was promoted to chief operating officer a year later, and became president in late 2000.
      Synonyms
      leader, head, headman, boss, chief, director, manager, overseer, controller, master
  • 3A member of a certain grade in some honorary orders, such as the grade next below commander in the Order of the British Empire.

    某一荣誉等级中的一分子(如英帝国勋位中四等勋爵士以下的级别)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tutte was elected to the Royal Society of Canada and of London, and was installed as an officer of the Order of Canada in late 2001.
    • It was attended in a body by the officers and members of the Yukon order of Pioneers.
    • In 1984, he was made an officer of the Order of the Rokel of the Republic of Sierra Leone, the country's highest accolade.
    • An officer of the Order of Canada, he received a distinguished service award from the Canadian Society for Nutritional Sciences in 1990.
    • The international optics authority, who had an asteroid named after him, is made an officer of the NZ Order of Merit.
    • The band's guitar player, Jimmy Page, is now an officer of the British empire.
verb ˈɒfɪsə
[with object]
  • 1Provide with military officers.

    配备军官

    the aristocracy wielded considerable power, officering the army

    贵族继续掌握主要政治大权,为军队配备军官。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Western militaries are typically small, professional organizations officered by the middle class and filled by working-class volunteers.
    • The Gendarmerie (local constabulary trained and officered by Marines), supported by the Marine brigade, tracked down and killed Peralte and Batraville.
    • It was six months before Andrew got a command, but then of troops purposely ill-equipped, poorly officered and virtually untrained.
    • The British officer corps was still dominated by the ‘gentleman’ and remained essentially a working-class Army officered by the upper classes.
    • At independence, the army of the Congo, known as the Force Publique, was officered by the Belgians and Lumumba had the audacity to support its ‘Congolisation’.
    1. 1.1 Act as the commander of (a unit)
      指挥
      foreign mercenaries were hired to officer new regiments

      国外雇佣兵受雇指挥新的团。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The temporary levies of the earlier period were replaced by standing armies, officered by professionals, comprising élite or shock troops plus conscripted peasants.
      • Thus most of the 380,000 blacks who served in the Army were in labor units officered by whites.
      • They finished training in December 1942 and three battalions of 1,000 men each were formed, but they were officered by Germans who gave their orders in German.
      • The Royal Navy - the navy which helped keep the peace in Europe and around the world for a hundred years - was officered by many such men, who started their careers as boys.
      • The Streltsy and the Cossacks were professional units but they were officered by foreigners.
      • The navy, of course, was commanded and largely officered by Royal Navy personnel.
      • It expanded by calling upon the states for militia, officered by men chosen and characterized by bonds of friendship, popularity, and politics.
      • The division's fighting elements were 8,000 Philippine Scouts, officered by Americans, a US infantry regiment some 2,000 strong, and a regiment of artillery.
      • The governor ultimately decided that ‘all the companies will be officered by white men in compliance with United States regulations.’
      • In 1644, Parliament passed Self-Denying Ordinance, intended to get soldiers out of Parliament, for the Roundhead army was largely officered by MPs.
      • The Hungarian parliament refused unless Hungarian was introduced as a language of command into Hungarian units, which would be officered uniquely by Hungarians, not by Germans.

Origin

Middle English: via Anglo-Norman French from medieval Latin officiarius, from Latin officium (see office).

Definition of officer in US English:

officer

noun
  • 1A person holding a position of command or authority in the armed services, in the merchant marine, or on a passenger ship.

    军官;(商船)船长;高级船员;(客轮)船长;高级船员

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In some cases, high-ranking officers re-entered the Red Army with their previous ranks restored.
    • He was commissioned as an armor officer in 1991 from Niagara University.
    • His father was a retired military intelligence officer in the Egyptian army.
    • Elected by a meeting of the ship's officers, it helps to foster comradely relations among servicemen.
    • The General was commissioned as an Infantry officer from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
    • His public service began as an Infantry officer in the Army.
    • I would not be in favor of seeing another commanding officer in charge of the military.
    • We have more women commissioned officers than the Active Army, even though we're about 60 percent smaller.
    • The hardest workers among you may become chief petty officers, warrant officers and commissioned officers.
    • He was one of the earliest Royal Marines officers to qualify as a fixed-wing pilot.
    • There are also schools to train officers for the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard.
    • She had lunch with some of the ship's officers before going on to meet members of her air squadrons.
    • "It became an intelligence war," said a senior military intelligence officer last week.
    • Anderson later served as a warrant officer and commissioned officer in the Army Reserve.
    • China has sacked two high-ranking naval officers involved in a fatal submarine accident.
    • But the retired army warrant officer said it's not good enough.
    • In 1969, he applied for Officer Candidate School and earned a commission as an Infantry officer.
    • The officers of the Continental Army made up perhaps the most cohesive and most national of institutions.
    • Commissioned as an infantry officer, he served in a variety of command and staff positions prior to joining the senior faculty at West Point.
    • The new pattern was that he appointed almost all retired army officers into civilian offices.
    Synonyms
    committee member, official, office-holder, office-bearer, board member, public servant, administrator, commissioner, executive, functionary, bureaucrat, dignitary
    1. 1.1 A policeman or policewoman.
      警官
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There are now many facets to police work and numerous officers not on patrol.
      • A procedure which left it to individual officers in police stations to perform some sort of balancing exercise would, it was said, be unworkable.
      • Unlike special constables, the officers will be full-time and have limited powers.
      • They were questioned by officers at a local police station before being released on bail until October 10.
      • Course instructors are officers from Pattaya police station.
      • There are a number of police stations where officers were selling confidential information to private investigators.
      • Seiler's case sparked a manhunt involving 150 officers, police dogs and a helicopter.
      • He was due to be interviewed by officers at Manchester Airport police station today.
      • In addition to mounted police, motorcyclists and special constables, undercover officers will mingle with crowds.
      • At a police station two plain-clothes officers introduced themselves as members of Special Branch.
      • Discipline in all walks of life, punctuality, politeness and good manners are expected from the police constables and officers.
      • The 33-year-old was interviewed by Garda officers at the police station at Dublin Airport.
      • Lancashire will soon be paying more retired officers than police constables it currently employs.
      • He then went to the police station whose officers promised to release him after interrogation.
      • The man was unable to give any information about himself, and officers contacted other police stations in the city to locate his relatives.
      • He followed the officer inside the cold police station.
      • At the police station, while officers were speaking to the individuals who had reported the threat, the man showed up.
      • They pulled into the police station and the officer guided him in.
      • As a poster campaign aimed at urging the public to be more vigilant was launched, transport police said plain-clothes officers would patrol the Tube network.
      • The car stopped in front of the police station and the officer pulled him out of the car harshly.
      Synonyms
      police officer, policeman, policewoman, pc, wpc, officer of the law, detective, dc
    2. 1.2 A bailiff.
      法警
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They are interrupted by a knock on the door and Val is horrified to find a bailiff officer on her doorstep.
      • When the court appoints a receiver or manager the receiver/manager is an officer of the court not the agent of either party in the proceedings.
      • She owed a vast sum of money, and the sheriff's officers arrived to confiscate the family property.
      • Every official examiner and deputy official examiner is an officer of every court in Ontario.
      • Strictly, this is not evidence, although it is accepted, being the representations of a responsible officer of the court.
      • Special bailiffs are officers appointed by the sheriff at the request of a plaintiff for the purpose of executing a particular process.
  • 2A holder of a public, civil, or ecclesiastical office.

    政府官员;担任公职者;基督教教会执事

    a probation officer

    缓刑犯监护官。

    the Chief Medical Officer

    首席卫生官。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • What is hair raising though is that a civil servant, an officer from the Road Traffic Commission, is involved.
    • He said she told a probation officer: "I will never forgive myself."
    • It is also an offence to make false representation to an immigration officer.
    • The ambassador and other embassy officers periodically urged the Government to expedite registration of church groups.
    • Government officers should see public property as their own and seek to protect it.
    • During months of bombing, there were no public health officers to issue death certificates, which explains the lack of official statistics.
    • Now we know our rights, and protect ourselves from scam attorneys and deceitful immigration officers.
    • Our system ordinarily reserves that function to the judicial officer hearing the merits of the matter.
    • The professional is held in high regard like the officers of a religious organization or a professor in the educational world.
    • They had forgotten that they no longer were royal officers, but civil servants.
    • Local electoral officers are responsible for the conduct of local authority elections.
    • Other statements indicate a wider discontent among government officers.
    • His wife, Janice, was only asked to confirm his identity to a coroners officer on Saturday July 19.
    • He left school at 16 to obtain a secure job as a tax officer in the civil service.
    • Environmental health officers serve closure orders when they believe there is a serious and immediate danger to public health.
    • He did not see his passport, and the agent dealt with the immigration officer at the airport.
    • It appears that his offences were committed after he had been recruited by intelligence officers of the government.
    • The samithi has pointed out the need to appoint a jurist or a civil service officer as chairman of the Board.
    • Where a court or a public officer wrongly refuses jurisdiction the exercise of the jurisdiction can be commanded by a writ of mandamus.
    • I like to drive, he told his probation officer after his arrest.
    • I have never heard of a judicial officer saying to a select committee that they want more jobs, better conditions, better pay, and all those things that flow from it.
    • Citizen public security officers marked by red armbands took their places.
    Synonyms
    representative, agent, deputy, messenger, envoy
    1. 2.1 A holder of a post in a society, company, or other organization, especially one who is involved at a senior level in its management.
      (尤指社团、公司等组织中的高层)职员
      a chief executive officer

      首席执行官。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Like Amegy, Sterling's officers and directors control about 9 percent of the bank's shares.
      • He is Lucent's chief technology officer and executive vice president of corporate strategy and marketing.
      • National union officers reported privatization increased the likelihood of redundancies and lower job security.
      • They have held corporate officers and directors accountable for their actions.
      • Francis becomes chief marketing officer and managing director at the Wayne, Pa., company.
      • The regional directorate has its own press officers, accountants and managers.
      • The investment management company separated the roles of chief investment officer and managing director following the controversy.
      • The university relations officer works to represent students on all matters pertaining to governance of the university.
      • There are several local union officials and officers involved.
      • Directors, officers and other senior financial officers set the tone for ethical behavior within any organization.
      • She said the Minister appointed the chief executive officer of the authority last week.
      • The chief technical officer and senior vice president also believes size is only part of the story.
      • He was promoted to chief operating officer a year later, and became president in late 2000.
      • The Applicant was represented by an officer of his trade union.
      • In the past decade, many of my co-workers have left journalism to become mostly corporate public relation officers.
      • He rocketed to the post of chief financial officer in less than eight years.
      • A creditor cannot come after an officer, director or shareholder to satisfy the obligations of the corporation.
      • Others argue that they can always unload a stock if corporate officers and directors are taking advantage of shareholders.
      • I carried over my enthusiasm for D-dimer testing to another hospital in which I was a medical senior house officer.
      • Its August survey of banks' senior loan officers says business loans are increasingly available.
      • For example left wing union officers organised the teachers' demonstration in London in March.
      Synonyms
      leader, head, headman, boss, chief, director, manager, overseer, controller, master
  • 3A member of a certain grade in some honorary orders.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It was attended in a body by the officers and members of the Yukon order of Pioneers.
    • Tutte was elected to the Royal Society of Canada and of London, and was installed as an officer of the Order of Canada in late 2001.
    • The band's guitar player, Jimmy Page, is now an officer of the British empire.
    • The international optics authority, who had an asteroid named after him, is made an officer of the NZ Order of Merit.
    • In 1984, he was made an officer of the Order of the Rokel of the Republic of Sierra Leone, the country's highest accolade.
    • An officer of the Order of Canada, he received a distinguished service award from the Canadian Society for Nutritional Sciences in 1990.
verb
[with object]
  • 1Provide with military officers.

    配备军官

    the aristocracy continued to wield considerable political power, officering the army

    贵族继续掌握主要政治大权,为军队配备军官。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Western militaries are typically small, professional organizations officered by the middle class and filled by working-class volunteers.
    • The British officer corps was still dominated by the ‘gentleman’ and remained essentially a working-class Army officered by the upper classes.
    • It was six months before Andrew got a command, but then of troops purposely ill-equipped, poorly officered and virtually untrained.
    • At independence, the army of the Congo, known as the Force Publique, was officered by the Belgians and Lumumba had the audacity to support its ‘Congolisation’.
    • The Gendarmerie (local constabulary trained and officered by Marines), supported by the Marine brigade, tracked down and killed Peralte and Batraville.
    1. 1.1 Act as the commander of (a unit)
      指挥
      foreign mercenaries were hired to officer new regiments

      国外雇佣兵受雇指挥新的团。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They finished training in December 1942 and three battalions of 1,000 men each were formed, but they were officered by Germans who gave their orders in German.
      • Thus most of the 380,000 blacks who served in the Army were in labor units officered by whites.
      • In 1644, Parliament passed Self-Denying Ordinance, intended to get soldiers out of Parliament, for the Roundhead army was largely officered by MPs.
      • The Streltsy and the Cossacks were professional units but they were officered by foreigners.
      • It expanded by calling upon the states for militia, officered by men chosen and characterized by bonds of friendship, popularity, and politics.
      • The navy, of course, was commanded and largely officered by Royal Navy personnel.
      • The division's fighting elements were 8,000 Philippine Scouts, officered by Americans, a US infantry regiment some 2,000 strong, and a regiment of artillery.
      • The Royal Navy - the navy which helped keep the peace in Europe and around the world for a hundred years - was officered by many such men, who started their careers as boys.
      • The governor ultimately decided that ‘all the companies will be officered by white men in compliance with United States regulations.’
      • The temporary levies of the earlier period were replaced by standing armies, officered by professionals, comprising élite or shock troops plus conscripted peasants.
      • The Hungarian parliament refused unless Hungarian was introduced as a language of command into Hungarian units, which would be officered uniquely by Hungarians, not by Germans.

Origin

Middle English: via Anglo-Norman French from medieval Latin officiarius, from Latin officium (see office).

随便看

 

英汉双解词典包含464360条英汉词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/11/8 23:00:20